No, he was Greek, from the island of Samos in the Aegean Sea.
Pythagoras' mother was Pythais. She was a native to the Greek island Samos
Only had 1/2 and 1/4. Half was a half moon that concaved to the right and one-foruth was a half moon that concaved to the left
It is one out of eight parts. It is a half of a half of a half. It is one out of eight parts. It is a half of a half of a half. It is one out of eight parts. It is a half of a half of a half. It is one out of eight parts. It is a half of a half of a half.
1/32
Cyprus is a Mediterranean island, south of Turkey, with Greek and Turkish speaking inhabitants.
its a city/state in the Mediterranean sea near Turkey. half the island is under Turkish control the other half Greece , however the Greek half has a governor of its own and a bishop of the Greek orthodox church .
Kos is the greek name of 'İstanköy' island. Kos is a greek island across Bodrum, Turkey.
Cyprus
Isn't it Cyprus?
greek Turkish very few Armenian Legally, by citizenship... Greeks 78%, Turkish 18%, Others 5%
Nope they r greek/Irish not Turkish =] they look cypriot but they arent =] ^^ Wrong. Tulisa Contostavlos is half Irish and half greek cypriot but Dino Contostavlos(Dappy) is full greekcypriot, as both of their dads are greekcypriot, dinos mum is greek cypriot but tulisa's mum is Irish
Cyprus is the correct answer
Greek and Turkish Cuisines Greek and Turkish Cuisines
Cyprus. ---- Definitely not Cyprus. Cyprus is in the meditterenian sea, which is at the south of turkey. There are more than 12 islands between Greece and Turkey, which are located on the egean sea.
Lectures in Cyprus will be in Greek or Turkish depending on which part of the island you are studying in.
After WWII, Cyprus was gaining independence from Britain and was filled with Greek nationalism, which alienated the large Turkish population. The desire of the Greek population for union with Greece was matched by Turkish intervention, leading to a coup by pro-Greek forces which spawned an invasion by Turkey into the north end of the island. This led to a division of the island into a Greek and Turkish part with population transfers and Turkish immigration creating a ethnically homogeneous population in each half. Efforts to end this division or create an independent Turkish Cypriot state have dominated the island's foreign affairs since then.